2016
DOI: 10.1002/etc.3266
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Aerobic biodegradation potential of endocrine‐disrupting chemicals in surface‐water sediment at Rocky Mountain National Park, USA

Abstract: Endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in surface water and bed sediment threaten the structure and function of aquatic ecosystems. In natural, remote, and protected surface-water environments where contaminant releases are sporadic, contaminant biodegradation is a fundamental driver of exposure concentration, timing, duration, and, thus, EDC ecological risk. Anthropogenic contaminants, including known and suspected EDCs, were detected in surface water and sediment collected from 2 streams and 2 lakes in Rocky … Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 93 publications
(154 reference statements)
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“…Environ Toxicol Chem 36, 2017 3051 biodegradable than the natural estrogens E1 and E2 [85,[109][110][111][112][113]. Significant aerobic biodegradation of EE2 has been reported previously in wastewater [71,114], wastewater-impacted streams sediments [70,72], and groundwater [113], and in remote locations at Rocky Mountain National Park [89] and was observed in the present study in Cedar Creek and Muck Swamp sediment treatments ( Figure 6). However, aerobic mineralization of 14 C-EE2 was detected in only 2 of 5 Congaree River microcosms, indicating limited biodegradability and increased environmental persistence in this system.…”
Section: Bioactive Contaminants In Congaree National Parksupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…Environ Toxicol Chem 36, 2017 3051 biodegradable than the natural estrogens E1 and E2 [85,[109][110][111][112][113]. Significant aerobic biodegradation of EE2 has been reported previously in wastewater [71,114], wastewater-impacted streams sediments [70,72], and groundwater [113], and in remote locations at Rocky Mountain National Park [89] and was observed in the present study in Cedar Creek and Muck Swamp sediment treatments ( Figure 6). However, aerobic mineralization of 14 C-EE2 was detected in only 2 of 5 Congaree River microcosms, indicating limited biodegradability and increased environmental persistence in this system.…”
Section: Bioactive Contaminants In Congaree National Parksupporting
confidence: 83%
“…Water and sediment were collected from 16 surface‐water sites distributed throughout the park to cover primary stream inflows (Congaree River, Cedar Creek, Dry Creek, Myers Creek, Tom's Creek, Wateree River) at respective upstream park boundaries and a cross section of the principal hydrologic features (tributaries, wetland, oxbow lakes; Figure and Table , and Supplemental Data Figure S3 and Table S1). Surface‐water samples were analyzed at the US Geological Survey (USGS) National Water Quality Laboratory in Denver (CO, USA) for 199 targeted organic analytes, including pharmaceuticals (110 total analytes; 107 pharmaceuticals, degradates, and metabolites) , hormones (20 analytes) , and organic waste indicator compounds (69 analytes) , as described previously . Bed sediment samples were analyzed at the National Water Quality Laboratory for concentrations of hormones (20 analytes) and organic waste indicator (61 analytes) compounds, as described previously .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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